AGENDA January 2026

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Permit requested by Real Madrid TV channel to film on the Acropolis

Permit requested by Real Madrid TV channel to film on the Acropolis

In their request for a permit from the CAC, the Spanish TV crew talks about a three hour filming session to cover the basket ball games between Panathinaikos and Real Madrid.
Memories of monuments

Memories of monuments

Authentic material from the most notable archive of the Museum.
Scholarships in Greek Archaeology in the UK

Scholarships in Greek Archaeology in the UK

Scholarships in Greek Archaeology in the UK for 2018/2019 have been announced by the Greek Archaeologicla Committee UK (GAKUC).
Roman times: Unusual climate plunged Eurasia into hunger and disease

Roman times: Unusual climate plunged Eurasia into hunger and disease

A recent study published in an esteemed academic journal indicates that volcanic eruptions in the mid 500s resulted in an unusually gloomy and cold period.
Why expressive brows might have mattered in human evolution

Why expressive brows might have mattered in human evolution

Research to raise a few eyebrows: Why expressive brows might have mattered in human evolution.
12th Trends in Classics

12th Trends in Classics

Final reminder for the registration at the 12th Trends in Classics International Conference.
International Summer School of Archaeological Science

International Summer School of Archaeological Science

Petnica 2018 ISSAS will take place from August 5th to 15th 2018 at Petnica Science Center (Serbia).
The ban of the cave bear

The ban of the cave bear

Researchers from Germany, Italy and Canada have conducted analyses to find out what likely caused the extinction of these large herbivores.
First human migration out of Africa more geographically widespread than thought

First human migration out of Africa more geographically widespread than thought

A project led by the Max Planck Institute for the Science of Human History has discovered a fossilized finger bone of an early modern human in the Nefud Desert of Saudi Arabia, dating to approximately 90,000 years ago.
The dinosaur menu, as revealed by calcium

The dinosaur menu, as revealed by calcium

By studying calcium in fossil remains in deposits in Morocco and Niger, researchers have been able to reconstruct the food chains of the past, thus explaining how so many predators could coexist in the dinosaurs’ time. 
The Cult of Saints in Late Antiquity

The Cult of Saints in Late Antiquity

The Cult of Saints in Late Antiquity project is a major 5-year ERC-funded research project, based primarily in Oxford, supported by a team in Warsaw.
Leventis Postdoctoral Research Associate in Hellenic Studies at Exeter

Leventis Postdoctoral Research Associate in Hellenic Studies at Exeter

The University of Exeter wishes to recruit a Postdoctoral Research Associate in Hellenic Studies.
The Forgotten Theatre II

The Forgotten Theatre II

The Conference will be held on the 29th (or 28th)- 30th of November 2018 at the University of Turin.
The Acropolis Museum excavation has become an archaeological site open to the public

The Acropolis Museum excavation has become an archaeological site open to the public

While excavating the Makriyannis plot of land, part of the ancient city’s residential network came to light in successive construction phases.
The Mystery of pregnant woman burial with skull hole is solved

The Mystery of pregnant woman burial with skull hole is solved

About ten years ago archaeologists discovered a medieval grave of a woman found with a hole on her skull and a foetus between her legs in Imola, Italy. Now researchers attempt to solve the mystery with a new study.
Decade of fossil collecting gives new perspective on Triassic period, emergence of dinosaurs

Decade of fossil collecting gives new perspective on Triassic period, emergence of dinosaurs

After a great mass extinction shook the world about 252 million years ago, animal life outside of the ocean began to take hold.
Tracking the spread of early hunter-gatherers through language

Tracking the spread of early hunter-gatherers through language

Scientists have further evidence that an ancient family of languages spread over most of the Australian continent in the last 6000 years, rapidly replacing pre-existing languages.
Marble statuette of the goddess Hygieia in the hands of antiques traffickers

Marble statuette of the goddess Hygieia in the hands of antiques traffickers

The statuette belongs to the type known as the Hope Hygieia and is a miniature copy from late Hellenistic –early Roman times after a large original of the 4th century BC.
Pompeii site yields new astonishing findings

Pompeii site yields new astonishing findings

Archaeologists working on Pompeii archaeological site have unearthed new remains of public and private areas.
Archaeology shines light on 6,000 years of history

Archaeology shines light on 6,000 years of history

The finds mean experts now have a much better understanding of how the Cambridgeshire landscape was used over 6,000 years of occupation.
Northerners have always been hardy!

Northerners have always been hardy!

Pioneering early people who lived at the end of the last ice age actually carried on with life as usual despite plummeting temperatures, a study at a world-famous archaeological site in North Yorkshire suggests.
An Egyptian sarcophagus that was thought to be empty contains mummy remains

An Egyptian sarcophagus that was thought to be empty contains mummy remains

Archaeologists at the University of Sydney, Australia, were surprised when they found a sarcophagus they thought was empty, stored for more than 150 years, contained the remains of a mummy.
New technology reveals secrets of famous Neandertal skeleton La Ferrassie 1

New technology reveals secrets of famous Neandertal skeleton La Ferrassie 1

In the case of La Ferrassie 1, these approaches have made it possible to identify new fossil remains and pathological conditions of the original skeleton as well as confirm that this individual was deliberately buried.
Parts of the Amazon thought uninhabited were actually home to up to a million people

Parts of the Amazon thought uninhabited were actually home to up to a million people

Parts of the Amazon previously thought to have been almost uninhabited were really home to thriving populations of up to a million people, new research shows.
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